1 the “Cactus Navy” at Guadalcanal

1 the “Cactus Navy” at Guadalcanal

1 The “Cactus Navy” at Guadalcanal It was only a small action that met little resistance, but it can be ar- gued that the raid on Tasimboko saved the First Marine Division on Guadalcanal and set up the turning point in World War II. —Capt. Frank J. Guidone, USMC (Ret.), commander of Company Able, 1st Raider Battalion, on Guadalcanal1 In the early evening of 7 September 1942, the rifl e companies of the U.S. Marine Corps’ 1st Raider Battalion embarked in the destroyer- transports Manley (APD-1) and McKean (APD-5) and the patrol craft YP-239 and YP-346 at Kukum on the north coast of Guadalcanal, en route to a site twenty miles to the east to launch a raid on Japanese forces occupying Tasimboko village. Th e YPs were former San Diego tuna boats sent to the Solomons by the U.S. Navy for duty as sup- ply ships. Normally engaged in hauling food, fuel, supplies, and oc- casionally personnel from Tulagi to Guadalcanal across the span of water separating the two islands, they had been draft ed as a last resort, aft er APDs Little (APD-4) and Gregory (APD-3) had been sunk by the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) destroyers Yudachi, Hatsuyuki, and Murakumo two days earlier in the waters between Guadalcanal and Savo Island.2 Th e Manley and McKean were the only two remaining units of Transportation Division 12, initially comprised of the fi ve destroyer- transports Manley (APD-1), Colhoun (APD-2), Gregory (APD-3), Little (APD-4) and McKean (APD-5), which had been sent to the Sol- omons, following the Battle of Savo Island, to deliver badly-needed supplies and support to the Marines on Guadalcanal. Th e APDs were {2} Chapter 1 converted World War I era fl ush-deck destroyers whose current mis- sion was to deliver a company-sized combat unit to a location off a hostile landing beach. Th ey would then stand off and provide gun- fi re support as needed while Higgins boats delivered the Marines to shore. As the Little discharged stores on the Guadalcanal beach on 30 August, she witnessed the destruction of Colhoun during a Japa- nese air raid as the APD patrolled off shore. Successive plane attacks sent the destroyer-transport to the bottom with fi ft y-one crewmen killed and eighteen wounded. Th e Little herself, as well as the Gregory, would be lost to enemy destroyer gunfi re on 4 September while re- turning to their anchorage at Tulagi Island aft er transporting a Ma- rine Raider Battalion to Savo Island. Th e Japanese, aft er direct hits from gun salvos left the APDs ablaze and sinking, steamed between the stricken ships fi ring shells and strafi ng survivors in the water. Th e Gregory sank about 0140, and Little some two hours later. Admiral Chester Nimitz, commander-in-chief Pacifi c Fleet, paid tribute to the destroyer-transports: “With little means, the ships performed duties vital to the success of the campaign.”3 THE TOKYO EXPRESS Th e three destroyers which attacked and sunk the two American APDs on 4 September were part of the so-called “Tokyo Express,” fast ships that by night transported food, reinforcement personnel, sup- plies and equipment to Japanese forces operating in and around New Guinea and the Solomons. Th e enemy had initiated use of the Express to counter the air superiority established by the Allies in the South Pacifi c in late August 1942 aft er Henderson Field became operational on Guadalcanal. Recognizing that its slow transports were vulnerable to attack by day, the IJN devised an alternative plan whereby warships of the Tokyo Express would make all deliveries in darkness and return to their originating bases prior to dawn in order to prevent daylight interception by Allied aircraft . A majority of the participating ships were part of the Eighth Fleet operating from Rabaul, New Britain, and Bougainville, Solomon Islands. (Rabaul, 565 nautical miles west- northwest of Guadalcanal, was the largest center of Japanese military activity in the South Pacifi c.) Some units from the Combined Fleet, home-based further north at Truk Atoll in the Caroline Islands, were oft en attached temporarily. Express operations, which began soon af- ter the Battle of Savo Island on 9 August 1942, continued until 25 The “Cactus Navy” at Guadalcanal {3} November 1943. On that date, fi ve American destroyers, under the command of Capt. Arleigh Burke, USN, interdicted and almost com- pletely destroyed three IJN destroyer-transports escorted by two destroyers in the Battle of Cape St. George. Th e sea battle, fought in waters between Cape St. George, New Ireland, and Buka Island (now part of the North Solomons Province in Papua, New Guinea), marked the end of Japanese resistance in the Solomon Islands.4 Map 1-1 Groups of Japanese warships termed the “Tokyo Express” made nightly runs from their bases at Rabaul, New Britain, and Bougainville in New Guinea, down the slot between the northern and southern Solomon Islands to deliver food, reinforce- ment personnel, supplies and equipment to Japanese ground forces operating in and around New Guinea and the Solomons. Source: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/pacifi c_islands_1943_1945/solomon_ islands.jpg IMPENDING TASIMBOKO RAID Following the destruction of three units of Transportation Division 12 within only fi ve days, and with only two destroyer-transports left to provide troop lift , Marine Col. Merritt A. “Red Mike” Edson draft - ed YPs 239 and 346 to participate in the raid on Tasimboko aft er he observed them working the Tulagi Harbor. When the ships formed at Kukum on 7 September 1942, the stark diff erences between the APDs and YPs were very apparent. While the destroyer-transports sported a coat of jungle-green paint and camoufl age nets to help them blend in against tropical backdrops, the former fi shing vessels were a dull {4} Chapter 1 navy gray.5 Another contrast was the ride the ships off ered; Marines aboard the 815-foot destroyer-transports were much happier during the ensuing wet, cold transit in rough seas than those in the two di- minutive vessels. A member of Able Company later remarked that the most miserable night of his life was the one he spent between 7 and 8 September while embarked in the YP-346. He described the condi- tions thus: Th e stack of that YP poured sparks [emitted by the laboring diesel engine] into the air all night. We were extremely crowded . so we huddled in a sitting position and attempted to brace ourselves to catnap. It was cold! Th e rolling vessel made some seasick and as they heaved we were all awash in cold sea water and vomit.6 Th e Guadalcanal Campaign, of which the impending raid would be only a small part, was spurred by the Japanese occupation of Tu- lagi, a small island nestled in a bay at Florida Island opposite Guadal- canal, on 3 May 1942. In response to the enemy having established a toehold in the strategically-located island chain, U.S. naval forces began to build a base on nearby Espiritu Santo Island three weeks later. Japan wanted an air fi eld in the Solomons from which its land- based bombers could provide air cover for the advance of Imperial land forces to Port Moresby, the capital city of Papua and the site of an Allied base (the territories of Papua and New Guinea were combined aft er World War II into a single territory that today is known as Papua New Guinea). Th e thousands of troops based there were the Allies’ last line of defense before Australia. Having found Tulagi fi t only for a seaplane base, on 5 July Japanese forces landed on Guadalcanal, twen- ty miles across the New Georgia Sound (which Allied servicemen re- ferred to as “Th e Slot”) from Tulagi, and began the rapid construction of Lunga Point Airfi eld from which the empire’s planes could menace the shipping lanes to Australia.7 In an eff ort to prevent that eventuality and gain control of the Solomons, 11,000 members of the 1st Marine Division landed at Gua- dalcanal on 7 August, and captured the airstrip at Lunga Point, as well as the Japanese encampment at Kukum on the west side of Lunga Point the following day. Th at same aft ernoon, aft er fi erce fi ghting, Marines discharged at Tulagi took the Japanese-held Island, as well as the smaller islands of Gavutu and Tanambogo. Th e captured airstrip on Guadalcanal was renamed Henderson Field, and its occupation and use by Allied forces temporarily halted Japanese expansion in the The “Cactus Navy” at Guadalcanal {5} South Pacifi c. Th e signifi cance of American control of the island— from which the Allies could expand their presence in the South Pa- cifi c while thwarting the Japanese thrust—was not lost on the enemy. Guadalcanal became a pivotal piece of island real estate, one that both sides wanted to control and to which they were willing to commit large numbers of forces. By day, aircraft from Henderson Field con- trolled the skies, allowing U.S. Navy transports and small vessels to operate in the area with some degree of safety. At night, however, con- trol of these waters shift ed as IJN warships, then safe from air attack, raced down the slot between the northern and southern Solomons with supplies and troops to resupply Japanese land forces—and to as- sault Allied ships caught outside the protected harbor of the fortifi ed island of Tulagai.8 FISHING VESSELS TO THE FORE How did the tuna boats from San Diego come to be plying the danger- ous Solomon Islands waters during the summer of 1942? A few weeks aft er the attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, Comdr.

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